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10 Ways to Know
If Your Firm Is Pulling
Their Value Behind Them
by Paul DiModica
Every day, management prospects hear the following
pitches from vendors:
We have the best product.
My firm's customer service team is the best.
Our pricing is the most competitive.
Our staffing team is the most qualified.
We are number one in our market.
As management prospects hear this corporate rhetoric day after
day, they just stop believing the pitches sales and marketing people
tell them and instead look for solid validation.
More often than not, most sales teams "pull" their sales value
behind them during the sales cycle by presenting these descriptions as
facts which are not up for validation.
This method of "pulling value from behind" is an ineffective marketing
and sales process and positions vendors on the same level as their
peers who are perceived to be business commodities.
"Value" is defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary as "relative
worth, utility, or importance".
Many sales teams utilize standard methods of vendor communication
by talking about their firm's value and how great they are. This
generalist approach places salespeople in a defensive position
with prospects about why they should buy from them.
Rather than have your salespeople pull their value behind them,
companies need to have their value out in front before
the sales cycle begins to make it easier to sell.
Most marketing programs use a passive communication model of "here
it is, this is what we do". This process over the long haul just
wastes money and valuable selling time.
How much time during an average sales cycle does your sales team
spend prospecting, educating new prospects on why your product
or service is different, and managing competitive issues?
Too much!
To sell more, you need to use "experiential marketing" techniques
to help the sales team get inbound qualified leads where the prospects
see your business value BEFORE the sales team
tries to sell them.
If a prospect "experientially" experiences your business value
before the sales team talks with them, the result is competitors
are eliminated, the sales cycle is shortened, and a profitable
gross margin is maintained.
WHY?
When a prospect approaches your firm after having experienced
your business value prior to the first sale, your sales team can
then spend most of their time personalizing how they will help
the prospect use your product or service as a business tool, instead
of spending a disproportionate amount of time in the sales cycle
cold calling,
So, should you advertise more?
No.
Advertising is a passive medium and does not educate prospects
on your value. It is a means to express why "you think" you have
value. Prospects must confirm you have value based on their own
internal metrics which cannot be done through ads in magazine,
TV or direct mail.
In fact, most advertising is focused on projecting what the advertiser
wants the prospect to "see". But at the end of the day, the prospect
does not care about anything except their personal business needs.
So how do you create a "value forward" approach to your
sales?
Instead of talking about how great you are, show prospects your
product or service value by giving them business content for FREE
up-front which will induce them into a sales action step to call
you.
Marketing tools like webinars, teleseminars, newsletters and workshops
are the key to communicating your value first to generate qualified
leads. These marketing devices allow your prospects to learn about
your value through their own filtering and judgment process and
if done correctly, they will call you and say "I am interested."
Take the following Value Forward Test to see if you
pull your value behind you.
Value Forward Test
- When explaining your sales value proposition to prospects,
do you sound like everyone else?
- When you present your offering to your prospects, do they expect
you to drop your price to match your competitors?
- Do prospects see you as a peer and and provider rather than
a vendor and a predator?
- When you explain your product or service, can the prospect
visualize the difference between your company and your competitors?
- Every time you meet or chat with a new prospect, do they say
they have not heard about your company?
- Are most of your qualified leads generated from cold calling?
- Does your marketing generate at least 3 qualified leads per
salesperson each month?
- Has your sales cycle timeline increased by at least 25% during
the last two years?
- When you meet with a management prospect, do you have a lot
of competitors?
- Does your marketing budget allocate more money for brochures
and trade shows than engagement devices like newsletters, webinars
and teleseminars?
Correct Answers:
| 1-No |
2-No |
3-Yes |
4-Yes |
5-No |
| 6-No |
7-Yes |
8-No |
9-No |
10-No |
So, stop saying how great you are
and start proving it before the sales cycle begins . . . and
you will sell a lot more.
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